Tragic Rabbit Posted July 28, 2006 Report Share Posted July 28, 2006 Song My 1968 I sing my song, soft and dreadful song my song, my song, Song My O, hear her pain drums within my heart my song, sad song, Song My in truth, My Lai met Company C and Death raised his baton My Lai, her lie finally came to light all heard her symphony Song My, My Lai bodies soaked in blood five hundreds left to lie left to slowly die sad song, My Lai sing loud, My Lai sing inside my soul chant innocents shot down My Lai, her truth must not silent be must chorus down through time soft hum, a hymn paean for the dead sing her sad song, Song My no lie, the truth it was babies, too never forget Song My * Quote Link to comment
dude Posted July 30, 2006 Report Share Posted July 30, 2006 How quickly we forget... I remember back to when My Lai hit the media... we (the American people) were appalled. But then it wasn't a war against Buddhism. Buddhists weren't thought to be the enemy. A young officer - Lt. James Calley - bit the bullet. Now under the current Gods Own Party leadership... similar stuff happens in Afghanistan and Iraq with even incursions into Pakistan. With Fox and CNN the current media leaders jostling for viewership and each trying to grabmore conservative viewers... the criticism -and coverage- is muted. Enlisted people are blamed this time. Political observation ended... thanks for this poem, TR. You're attention to recent history earns you the prose and poetry title of AwesomeHistorian. Quote Link to comment
Tragic Rabbit Posted July 31, 2006 Author Report Share Posted July 31, 2006 Now under the current Gods Own Party leadership... similar stuff happens in Afghanistan and Iraq with even incursions into Pakistan. With Fox and CNN the current media leaders jostling for viewership and each trying to grab more conservative viewers... the criticism -and coverage- is muted. Well, I think that's exactly it, the federal government learned its lesson from Vietnam and Watergate and now manages to prevent critique...as well as full and honest coverage. Anything uncomplimentary to the administration is nixed...long before it hits API, TV news, net news sources, etc. I mean, contrast the situation with Fox News' White House stamp of approval against the hero-worship accorded (mid-1970s) The New York Times for breaking that scandal, for speaking out against the then current administration. Contrast CNN's war coverage with the news coverage, even by Army journalists and photographers, of Vietnam from '68 onward. And so, then what happened? For the first and only time, a President had to apologize, face impeachment and actually resign his elected office to avoid prosecution. For the first time and only time, public opinion forced a country OUT of a (undeclared) war. I think steps are taken in all quarters to ensure that public opinion never again be influenced by the facts of any administration's decisions, wars and scandals. Bread and circuses, American Idol, celebrity scandals and an iron fist around the neck of impartial journalism keep us placated, quiescent, numbed to the 'news'. What a great country we have...or could, if we let it be one. Repressive government, wiretapping citizens, curtailment of civil liberties...isn't that what we were told, while growing up, made other countries inferior to America? I guess, as in Orwell's 1984, history is fluid, depending upon who is doing the remembering...and why. Political observation ended... thanks for this poem, TR. You're attention to recent history earns you the prose and poetry title of AwesomeHistorian. Thanks, O Awesome One! I do think certain times are pivotal in our history, WWII obviously (I assume obviously). Just lately, I've been focusing some on 1968-69. Events of those years shaped our society for decades, and we still bear the marks. To know ourselves, our times and understand events as they unfold, we must know our history. Surely, knowing something of our recent history, meaning the 20th century, isn't asking too much? :sad11: TR Quote Link to comment
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